If Tom Cruise has the intensity of a Jedi knight, then Owen
Wilson has the bodacious audacity of Jabba the Hutt, and
rarely has the Dark Side been
this much fun.
Which would make Vince
Vaughn Chewbacca—both in
physical bearing and in downdeep soul. He and Wilson—
without question Hollywood’s
newest poster child—share
some nice chemistry in the
bawdy, freewheeling “Wedding
Crashers,” easily the funniest
film I’ve seen this year.
Wilson and Vaughn play divorce mediators John Beckwith
and Jeremy Grey, Washington,
D.C., attorneys who’ve never
quite overcome adolescence.
These guys are woman-crazed,
party-happy bachelors who
sneak into weddings to meet
girls. More precisely, to bed
half-drunk, emotionally supercharged women whom they’ll
never see again. Jewish, Asian,
Irish, Hindu, Italian—no wedding is too intimidating, no ceremony without possibility, and
they have the smooth moves and
the convincing alibi (“We’re
Uncle Ned’s kids, twice removed”) to get them through the
door. The single women, the free
food and the bottomless champagne glasses are never far beyond.
They dance with spinsters
and tell fabulous stories and Jeremy even creates toy balloon
animals for the tykes. It’s a ruse
of course, single women being
suckers for men who make balloon concoctions for children.
The two are charming and wellbehaved and their actions, if not
entirely honorable, at least come
with a rule-laden code of conduct. They are very often the life
of the party.
John and Jeremy hit pay
dirt when they manage to
crash the wedding of the U.S.
Treasury secretary’s daughter.
Sec. William Cleary (Christopher Walken) also happens to be
a presidential hopeful, and the
wedding has been heralded as
the event of the season. Cleary
has two unmarried daughters as
well, the level-headed Claire (a
delightful Rachel McAdams)
and the pert, perky, absolutely
insane Gloria (Isla Fisher).
When Gloria falls for Jeremy
and John falls for Claire, the
duo’s normal love-’em-andleave-’em routine is thrown into
turmoil.
When John and Jeremy are
invited for a weekend at the
Clearys’ opulent beach house—
well, romantic comedies usually
don’t get this close to slapstick.
Or this close to belly-slapping
funny. (Nor do families, one
might hope, get as dysfunctional
as the Clearys do.) Let’s just say
that “Wedding Crashers” is unabashedly R-rated, uncommon
for a genre that hopes to attract
the teenaged date crowd—although “Crashers” uses its R rating to the max. The naked flesh
and sexual innuendo fly freely,
although some smart performances and sassy dialogue keep
the film far above the norm.
Owen Wilson pretty much
plays Owen Wilson in the
film—and why not? It’s worked
in the past and works here as
well. The real treat though is
Vince Vaughn. Reduced lately to
status of oafish lout (“Starsky &
Hutch,” “Be Cool”), here Vaughn
gives the kind of full-bodied
performance that drove some
nice indie films like “Swingers”
and the underrated “A Cool, Dry
Season.” As a team, these guys
click. I suspect that we’ll be seeing more of them in tandem.
For the first 90 minutes or so,
“Crashers” rarely loses its wit or
its balance. As the weekend at
the Clearys draws to a close,
however, so does the film’s flirtatious ease, its roguish and burlesque quality. For a few moments, “Crashers” skirts toward
a darker (and frankly, tasteless)
arena of “funeral crashing”—
although the plot quickly, wisely
veers back again toward the
bawdy sublime. Still, don’t expect much of a moral here (other
than maybe “love triumphs”) because this is more “Animal
House” than “Pillow Talk.” Yet
for those of us who enjoy a silly
romp, it’s a nice change of pace
from the stable and predictable
rom-com.
In a nutshell:
Owen Wilson
and Vince Vaughn score major
comedy points in an adultthemed story about two slick
pickup artists who ultimately
meet their collective matches.
Sometimes love’s being blind is
a blessing. For the most part, so
is this awfully funny, slightly
wicked film.